powering the cell part 1 Flashcards
what are the two ways cells are fuelled
1) carbon source
2) capturing energy from chemical reactions or light to produce usable energy
which macromolecule requires the most amount of energy to synthesise
protein
what is a heterotroph
cells which use organic compounds as a source of carbon as well as the source of energy
what is an autotroph
cells which use carbon dioxide as a source of carbon and light as a source of energy
what is a chemoautotroph
cells which use carbon dioxide as a source of carbon and inorganic compounds as a source of energy
outline the structure of ATP
3 phosphates
adenine base
ribose/pentose sugar
outline how ATP produces enegry
when hydrolysed with the addition of water the bond between phosphate 2 and 3 becomes unstable so ATP–> ADP which is an exogenic reaction, producing energy
how much energy is released when ATP goes to ADP
31 KJoules
what processes generate ATP
1) aerobic oxidation
2) fermentation/ anaerobic metabolism of glucose
3) photosynthesis
4) electron transport and proton motive force
outline how ATP is generated
1) the addition of a phosphate to ADP
2) electrons lost from a donor in reactions involving chemical substrates release energy
3) this is harvested to phosphorylate ADP to ATP
4) electrons move from a higher energy level to a lower one on the acceptor molecule, this movement released energy to phosphorylate
outline oxidative phosphorylation in chemotrophs
electrons move from a high energy level in a chemical molecule to a lower energy level in another molecule
the movement releases energy which turns ADP- ATP
outline photophosphorylation in phototrophs
light is used to excite photosynthetic pigments to move the electrons to an excited state which is unstable
therefore the electron is transferred to a lower energy level
what happens when a substance is reduced or oxidised
a substrate gains an electron so the positive charge is reduced
a substrate loses an electron so the positive charge is increased
define reducing power
the potential of a substance to reduce another substance by the loss or gain or an electron or by the addition or removal of hydrogen
what is a hydride ion
an ion made up of a proton (H+) and two electrons